Business & Tech

Hospital Safety Rankings: How Did Leonard Morse Hospital Score?

The Leapfrog Group announced its ratings, which give hospitals a grade of A through F for patient safety.

Marc Torrence, Patch National Staff contributed to this report.

NATICK, MA—The Leapfrog Group, a nonprofit founded by employers and health-care providers, announced its Spring 2016 hospital safety rankings Monday, a measure of how safe a hospital is for patients.

Leapfrog also conducted an analysis with researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine's Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality. It estimated that 206,021 avoidable deaths occur each year in U.S. hospitals.

Find out what's happening in Natickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to the rankings, Leonard Morse Hospital has received a B grade in terms of patient safety, dropping from two previous A grades in 2015. The hospital has received an A grade in each grading session since the Spring of 2015.

You can view Leonard Morse Hospital's full assessment here.

Find out what's happening in Natickfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Hospitals were given a letter grade from A through F based on several factors. Of the 2,571 hospitals studied nationwide, 798 earned an A, 639 earned a B, 957 earned a C, 162 earned a D and 15 earned an F.

At the state level, Massachusetts hospitals were ranked the fourth-safest out of the fifty states; trailing Vermont, Maine and Rhode Island. 62.1 percent of Massachusetts hospitals studied were given an A grade.

State rankings were based on a percentage of state hospitals receiving an A grade.

Leapfrog looked at medical errors, accidents, injuries and infections to determine the grades. The goal was to determine a patient's risk of further injury or infection if they visited a certain hospital.

Hospitals given a B rating by Leapfrog had a 9 percent higher risk of avoidable death than A hospitals. That number jumps to 35 percent in C hospitals and 50 percent higher in D and F hospitals.

The analysis estimates that 33,459 lives could be saved if every hospital improved their safety record to A standards. Still, the study estimates 43,903 avoidable deaths in A hospitals each year.

Leapfrog releases its rankings twice a year.

“It is time for every hospital in America to put patient safety at the top of their priority list, because tens of thousands of lives are stake,” Leapfrog President Leah Binder said in a press release. “The Hospital Safety Score alerts consumers to the dangers, but as this analysis shows, even A hospitals are not perfectly safe.”

Photo via Shutterstock

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.